Anne Knight
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Anne Knight 1786 - 1862 was a social reformer noted as a pioneer of feminism.
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[edit] Family Background
She was the daughter of William Knight, a Chelmsford grocer and Priscilla Allen, daughter of the non-conformist radical. The family were Quakers and took an active part in temperance and anti-slavery movements.
[edit] First Work & Early Frustrations
In 1831 she wrote Mary Grey: A Tale for Little Girls.
Anne founded a branch of the Women's Anti-Slavery Society in Chelmsford and worked closely with Thomas Clarkson.
A village, Knightsville, was named after her in Jamaica.
When women were prevented from participating in the World Anti-Slavery Convention in London in 1840, Anne was outraged, and started to campaign for women's rights. In 1847 she produced what is considered the first leaflet for women's suffrage. Her efforts to impress the importance of women's suffrage on such reform leaders as Henry Brougham and Richard Cobden proved of little use, as did her efforts with the Chartist leadership.
[edit] Move to France
She moved to France in 1846 and participated in the revolution of 1848. With Jeanne Deroin she challenged the banning of women from political clubs and the publication of feminist material. In 1851, she worked with Anne Kent to form the Sheffield Female Political Association, the first British organisation to call for women's suffrage.
[edit] Death & Legacy
She never married and died in Waldersbach, near Strasbourg, France on November 4, 1862.
One of the student accommodation 'New Houses' buildings at the University of Essex 'Anne Knight House' is named after her. In January 2005 the Colchester Quaker Housing Association opened a hostel for young people in Chelmsford, her birthplace, and named it Anne Knight House in her honour.

